The Peterborough Evening Telegraph

CEO caught in Nepalese fires

- Ben Jones ben.jones@jpimedia.co.uk

The chief executive of Peterborou­gh-based The Leprosy Mission, Peter Waddup, has described what it was like being evacuated to safety to avoid wildfires in Nepal this week.

The Asian nation - situated in the Himilaya – is currently in the midst of a full scale national emergency that has seen thousands of forest fires break out across the country for more than a month.

The fires have caused devastatio­n to the country’s ecology, economy and it thought to have reduced the lifespan of the local population due to dangerous air pollution.

One of those affected by the fires has been Peter who was visiting one of the charity’s dedicated hospitals in Anandaban, on the outskirts of the country’s capital Kathmandu.

The CEO of the charity which is based in Orton Goldhay - even captured a pictures of the dramatic events unfolding.

Speaking about his experience, Peter said: “We were reassured on Monday night by our wonderful hospital manager that the blaze was still a couple of days away from the hospital.

“Forest fires are fairly commonplac­e in this area of Nepal and there have been many in recent weeks. The air quality is poor as a result but first thing on Tuesday morning, the hospital manager told us the blaze had spread significan­tly and he had been up most of the night reviewing evacuation plans.

“We asked what we could do to help and were told that they needed to move the patients away from the fire as far as possible. There are a couple of old unused wards at the other side of the hospital site. Our amazing supporters from across the UK who are visiting Anandaban Hospital rolled up their sleeves. They set to work disinfecti­ng the old wards.

“At this point we were unsure if the whole site would need to be evacuated. After we had finished preparing the wards, we were told, as visitors, there was little more we could do to help. We were advised to move to Kathmandu.

“The last I heard from the country leader of The Leprosy Mission Nepal, who is with the firefighte­rs and members of the armed forces, is that the flames have narrowly missed the hospital site. It was a tense situation as the blaze had already jumped a firebreak.

“It has been a traumatic time for hospital staff who always put the safety of their patients before their own because Anandaban is a leprosy hospital it is tellingly positioned on the top of the hill away from the city. Somewhere patients were outcast to at a time when there wasn’t an effective cure for leprosy.

"In the past decade, the team at Anandaban have enduredsom­uch.Theteamonc­e again responded to a national crisis in 2020 in the wake of the pandemic. A 10-bed Covid isolation unit was opened which cared for hundreds of critically-ill patients.”

 ?? ?? Fires in the forest surroundin­g Anandaban, on the outskirts of Kathmandu
Fires in the forest surroundin­g Anandaban, on the outskirts of Kathmandu

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